New Straits Times

FAKE NEWS ‘FACTORIES’ UNCOVERED!

MCMC has detected 1,500 false news items disseminat­ed via social media

- Additional reporting by Seri Nor Nadiah Koris MOHD NASARUDDIN PARZI AND MOHD AIZAT SAMSUDDIN

'FACTORIES’ actively producing propaganda against the government have been discovered, says Malaysian Communicat­ions and Multimedia Commission chief. The aim is to cast aspersions on the government, with the ultimate aim of toppling it.

CERTAIN movements are using social media to actively spread propaganda against the government, reveals the Malaysian Communicat­ions and Multimedia Commission (MCMC).

MCMC chief operating officer Datuk Dr Mazlan Ismail said the movements acted as “factories” to create false news, with the primary aim of disputing the integrity and efficiency of the government, as well as targeting Malays and Islam.

MCMC had detected more than 1,500 false news items disseminat­ed via social media, which contained elements that disputed the credibilit­y of government agencies, Malays and Islam.

“We have addressed it accordingl­y via our portal sebenarnya.my. We came to these findings ever since the portal was created to fend off various forms of defamation and false news on social media over the past year.

“We feel that there are ‘factories’ creating false news.

“(First,) they (the factories) dispute the government’s endeavours and eventually (the false news agenda call for) the change of government. This is the theory behind it,” he said.

Dr Mazlan said this at the Bicara BH programme titled “The Internet and Elections” at Balai Berita here yesterday.

Besides Mazlan, two other panel members were Deputy Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Datuk Dr Asyraf Wajdi Dusuki and Jaringan Melayu Malaysia president Datuk Azwanddin Hamzah.

Commenting on false news, Mazlan said it was deliberate­ly created by certain individual­s and, most alarmingly, by hegemonic elements out there who were seizing the opportunit­y to use the same platform to destroy the country.

He added that false news was a global issue that was also shackling powerful nations like the United States and the United Kingdom.

The negative impact it had on the UK in the Brexit referendum process and the US presidenti­al election, he said, should serve as a lesson.

“When the UK government called for the Brexit referendum, it was not ready for it. After that, things went out of control.

“It was hit hard by the Brexit issue, but nothing can be done now. All this was due to false news. It’s the same in the US,” he said.

Mazlan said according to a study in the UK, people’s trust in traditiona­l media had increased up to 60 per cent, compared with 48 per cent last year, when Brexit was a major topic.

He said this showed that when the Brexit referendum was held, UK citizens were exposed to false news on the Internet, which greatly influenced them.

“In the US, a 2016 study showed that traditiona­l media had a dominance of only 32 per cent. But, when Donald Trump won, people regretted that they put their trust more on social media than traditiona­l media.”

“Thus, in September last year, traditiona­l media dominance rose to 52 per cent,” he said, adding that the world community’s trust in news on social media and the Internet was showing a decline.

On the implementa­tion of the Anti-Fake News Act 2018, Mazlan said the act was in use, but enforcemen­t agencies were streamlini­ng procedures, especially in the areas of investigat­ion and detention.

“We have set up a special committee, headed by the police, and discussed the standard operating procedures.

“When there is a case, the court will decide whether the news is false or not.”

“The act is one thing, but its implementa­tion requires the cooperatio­n of all agencies, especially in establishi­ng evidence, making arrests and taking action because the act involves a heavy penalty, which means that the implementa­tion has to be smooth because of its huge impact.”

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 ?? PIC BY ROSELA ISMAIL ?? Malaysian Communicat­ions and Multimedia Commission chief operating officer
Datuk Dr Mazlan Ismail (second from left), Deputy Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Datuk Dr Asyraf Wajdi Dusuki (third from left) and Jaringan Melayu Malaysia...
PIC BY ROSELA ISMAIL Malaysian Communicat­ions and Multimedia Commission chief operating officer Datuk Dr Mazlan Ismail (second from left), Deputy Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Datuk Dr Asyraf Wajdi Dusuki (third from left) and Jaringan Melayu Malaysia...

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